Comment by OutOfHere
20 hours ago
For lipids, besides the named tests, HDL, LDL, and triglyceride tests are older but shouldn't be overlooked.
For measuring inflammation, besides hs-CRP, additional tests are relevant and overlooked: regular CRP, ESR, and homocysteine.
Additionally, a heart attack can result from parasite induced inflammation too, e.g. in chagas disease, which is becoming increasingly common in the US while being very undetected without explicit testing. It is also very difficult to treat, but the gist 4196f31d12a43a95756e792500ff516f has some info on treating it. Lyme disease too can harm the heart permanently. In both cases a pacemaker could help as applicable.
Can you expand more on why you'd want regular CRP over hs-CRP (specifically for cardiovascular risk)?
For homocysteine, one proxy is B12 or folate (which are more cost-effective to test). To my knowledge, ESR is used in certain rheumatologic conditions, and was used more often in the past, but isn't currently used for heart disease.
It is true that hs-CRP is relevant for cardiovascular risk. CRP and ESR are more for broader inflammatory risk, for acute and chronic values respectively.